## Correct Answer: A. Pupils accommodate but do not react This clinical presentation is pathognomonic for **Argyll Robertson pupils** (ARP), the hallmark neurological sign of **neurosyphilis** (tertiary syphilis). The patient's history of unprotected sexual intercourse 20 years ago, combined with neurological symptoms and visual disturbances, points to late neurosyphilis—likely general paresis of the insane (GPI) or tabes dorsalis. The Argyll Robertson pupil occurs due to **selective damage to the pretectal nucleus and dorsal midbrain** (specifically the light reflex arc) while the accommodation pathway (mediated by the Edinger-Westphal nucleus and parasympathetic fibers) remains relatively intact. This dissociation is the defining feature: pupils **constrict during accommodation** (near vision) but **fail to constrict to direct light** (light reflex absent). Pathophysiologically, *Treponema pallidum* causes chronic inflammation and gliosis in the midbrain, selectively affecting the pupillary light reflex pathway while sparing the accommodation pathway. The pupils are typically small and irregular. This sign is so specific for neurosyphilis that its presence should always prompt serological testing (RPR/VDRL, FTA-ABS, TP-PA) and CSF examination. In the Indian context, neurosyphilis remains an important diagnosis in patients with late-stage untreated syphilis, particularly in high-risk populations. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Pupils react but do not accommodate** — This describes the **opposite** of Argyll Robertson pupils and is seen in conditions affecting the parasympathetic accommodation pathway (e.g., atropine toxicity, Adie's tonic pupil in early stages). In neurosyphilis, the light reflex is lost while accommodation is preserved—the reverse of this option. This is a classic NBE trap using the inverse presentation. **C. Pupils neither react nor accommodate** — This represents **complete pupillary paralysis** (both light and accommodation pathways damaged), seen in severe midbrain lesions, third nerve palsy, or atropine overdose. Neurosyphilis causes selective damage to the light reflex arc, not global pupillary dysfunction. The accommodation reflex is preserved in ARP, making this option incorrect. **D. Pupils react and accommodate** — This is the **normal pupillary response** seen in healthy individuals. While it may seem reasonable, it ignores the specific neurological damage caused by neurosyphilis. The question's clinical context (20-year history of untreated syphilis with neurological symptoms) demands recognition of the pathognomonic ARP sign, not a normal response. ## High-Yield Facts - **Argyll Robertson pupils** = light reflex lost, accommodation preserved (dissociation of pupillary responses). - **Neurosyphilis** (tertiary syphilis) causes ARP via selective damage to the **pretectal nucleus and dorsal midbrain**. - ARP pupils are typically **small, irregular, and unequal** (anisocoria common). - **Tabes dorsalis** and **general paresis of the insane (GPI)** are the two main neurosyphilis presentations with ARP. - Diagnosis of neurosyphilis requires **RPR/VDRL, FTA-ABS, TP-PA serology** plus **CSF examination** (elevated protein, pleocytosis, positive serology). - ARP is so specific for neurosyphilis that its presence warrants immediate syphilis serology and CSF analysis in Indian clinical practice. ## Mnemonics **ARP = Accommodation Retained, Pupillary light reflex lost** Remember: In Argyll Robertson Pupils, the patient can **A**ccommodate but cannot **R**eact to light. The dissociation is the key—one pathway works, the other doesn't. **Neurosyphilis Red Flags: ARP + Ataxia + Argyll** **A**rgyll Robertson pupils, **A**taxia (from tabes dorsalis), **A**rteritic complications = Think **neurosyphilis** (tertiary syphilis). This triad helps recall the classic presentation. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs the clinical history of old untreated syphilis with pupillary dysfunction to test whether students confuse Argyll Robertson pupils (light reflex lost, accommodation preserved) with the opposite pattern (option B: react but don't accommodate). The inverse presentation is a classic trap for students who remember "dissociation" but reverse which pathway is affected. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, Argyll Robertson pupils in a patient with late neurological symptoms should immediately raise suspicion for untreated neurosyphilis—a diagnosis that remains relevant in India's high-burden STI population. The presence of ARP is so specific that it warrants urgent serology and CSF analysis, as neurosyphilis is treatable with high-dose penicillin (or ceftriaxone in penicillin-allergic patients per NACO guidelines) if caught early enough to prevent irreversible neuronal damage. _Reference: Harrison Ch. 207 (Neurosyphilis); Robbins Ch. 8 (Treponema pallidum pathology); KD Tripathi Ch. 52 (Syphilis pharmacotherapy)_
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